Pfizer And Ranbaxy Settle Lipitor Patent Litigation Worldwide

Main Category: Hypertension
Also Included In: Cholesterol
Article Date: 23 Jun 2008 - 2:00 PDT

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'Pfizer And Ranbaxy Settle Lipitor Patent Litigation Worldwide'

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Pfizer Inc announced that it has entered into an agreement with generics manufacturer Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd. of India and certain of its affiliates to settle substantially all their patent litigation worldwide involving Lipitor, the world's most-prescribed cholesterol-lowering medicine. Under the terms of the agreement, Ranbaxy will have a license to sell generic versions of Lipitor and Caduet in the United States effective November 30, 2011. Caduet is a medicine that combines the active ingredients of Lipitor and Norvasc and treats both high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

The settlement provides shareholders of Pfizer and Ranbaxy, as well as patients, with substantial certainty regarding the potential date - November 30, 2011 - for entry of a generic version of Lipitor in the United States. In addition, the agreement provides a license for Ranbaxy to sell generic versions of Lipitor on varying dates in seven additional countries: Canada, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, Italy and Australia. Pfizer and Ranbaxy have also resolved their disputes regarding Lipitor in Malaysia, Brunei, Peru and Vietnam.

The lawsuits between Pfizer and Ranbaxy regarding Lipitor and Caduet will be dismissed in the specified countries, and Ranbaxy will no longer contest the validity of Pfizer's patents in the specified countries, including the United States, according to the agreement. The settlement also resolves all patent litigation with Ranbaxy relating to Accupril in the United States and Viagra in Ecuador.

"This agreement is a win-win-win because it is pro-patient, pro-competition and pro-intellectual property," said Ian Read, president of Worldwide Pharmaceutical Operations for Pfizer. "The agreement provides patients with access to a generic product much earlier than if Ranbaxy were unsuccessful in obtaining approval for its product and overcoming the relevant patents. It provides substantial certainty regarding the timing of the entry of a generic version of Lipitor. Finally, the agreement clearly reaffirms the value and importance of intellectual property and this country's well-balanced system of creating incentives to develop innovative medicines while at the same time establishing a strong generic drug business."

"Without patents and rigorous defense of intellectual property rights, innovators would face significant challenges that could inhibit the discovery of new medicines," Mr. Read added.

The settlement provides Ranbaxy with licenses to all the patents it needs to make the generic product and enables Ranbaxy to manufacture and launch a generic version of Lipitor prior to the expiration of the crystalline and amorphous patents.

The Lipitor patents involved in this agreement are the basic compound patent, which expires in the United States in 2010; the enantiomer patent, which expires in the United States in 2011; as well as various process and crystalline form patents, which expire in 2016 and 2017; and the combination patent for Caduet, which expires in 2018.

The settlement complies with all applicable laws, and does not contain any of the practices ��" such as "reverse payments" - that have been identified as of concern recently by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

Pfizer has been defending Lipitor patent challenges by Ranbaxy throughout the world since 2003. The agreement pertains solely to Ranbaxy and its affiliates and does not cover legal challenges to the Lipitor patents involving other generic manufacturers. However, Ranbaxy was the first generic challenger to the listed Lipitor patents and, as such, holds the rights to 180 days of marketing exclusivity in the United States.

The patent infringement litigation between Pfizer and Ranbaxy relating to Lipitor will continue in five other European countries -- Finland, Spain, Portugal, Denmark and Romania. Court cases involving the enantiomer patents are pending in Spain and Portugal, while an infringement action on the commercial process patent is pending in Finland. Patent cases involving the enantiomer patent are pending in Denmark and Romania.

About Pfizer Inc

Founded in 1849, Pfizer is the world's largest research-based pharmaceutical company. Pfizer is taking new approaches to advancing better health as it discovers, develops, manufactures and delivers quality, safe and effective prescription medicines to treat and help prevent disease for both people and animals. Pfizer also partners with healthcare providers, governments and local communities around the world to expand access to medicines and to provide better quality health care and health system support. At Pfizer, approximately 85,000 colleagues in more than 90 countries work every day to help people stay happier and healthier longer and to reduce the human and economic burden of disease worldwide.

http://www.pfizer.com

View drug information on Caduet; Viagra.


Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Lipitor

posted by Don Neckers rp on 21 Dec 2011 at 4:12 pm

How can you justify the brand price for seniors after patent expired the government should bill you for all rxs that were charged the brand price when the generic was available. How much profit is enough,by the way I'm a stockholder of pfizer

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Who Pays For The Drug?

posted by Ron Ellenbecker on 20 Sep 2010 at 10:55 am

When drug companies market a drug they do so to earn a profit. They do not want other people making money off of their very expensive research and processing a drug through the system to get approved. This is VERY expensive.

For some reason... people have lost sight of the fact that it is a business. They need to make money to stay in business. For every drug that makes it through the system 100 others do not. Some making to near approval and then shut down. All that money out the window.

Does it hurt when you need a medication and cannot afford it. Yes, it does. That does not give anyone the right to demand a company lose money and/or go out of business simply because they have a need. If you do it to one drug... you will find others will follow. Soon, no drug company would make any drug not already on the market. Who would want to spend billions researching and developing a drug only to be told they have to sell it at this or that cost never making enough to recoup the costs let alone grow to be able to make different drugs.

Want to lower the costs of medications? Get politicians out of the pharma business. Let the pharma companies do what they do best... develop and market drugs.

This does not address the other problems we all know pharma companies have... this is just addressing the idea that a company should be forced to loose money because someone thinks they have a right to their product.

BTW, there are other more effective means of lowering high cholesterol. People have grown up in the world of "abuse my body and I'll take a pill to fix it" instead of the world of exercise, eat right, and all the things that can prevent the problems in the first place. You get more benefit out of good solid exercise, well balanced diet, avoiding the foods that individually your body does not deal with well (everyone is different no diet works the same way for everyone), good sleep, and a clean drug free (smoking/alcohol/and other poisons ingested)than Lipitor will provide.

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Pfizer's Greed

posted by jerry warriner on 19 Sep 2010 at 1:26 pm

Lipitor is an expensive drug. It's also been shown to be to perhaps the most effective medication for controlling high cholesterol.

Pfizer's successful fight to protect its patent to prevent the manufacture of generic equivalents was nothing less than a sweetheart deal. The shady court ruling that extended Pfizer's patent was, in my opinion, corrupt.

But drug companies can afford to hire high-priced lawyers to defend their patents. And it is the public that suffers.

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